St Agnes Anglican Church

1888

About the year 1888 or 1889, after the railway was extended from Brighton to
Sandringham, Mr G. Hamilton Traill and family came to live at "Glenmore", Bluff
Road.

Mrs Traill was greatly concerned over the lack of religious training for
children. She began the first Sunday School in Black Rock, in the front room of a
house belonging to a Mr Wilson in Seaview Crescent.

1892

The Congregationalists built a small wooden building
on the site in Arkaringa Crescent on which their brick church was later built. They
at first used it for services on alternate Sundays only, and offered the use of it at
other times to the church people.

1894

Around 1894 Rev Caffin gave up services at Beaumaris. He brought over to Black Rock
a beautifully made desk which had been given to him by Mr Smart, an architect from
Beaumaris — the desk had been made from blackwood left over from the Cathedral
pews. It was used both as a lectern and a pulpit. It was not long before an organ of
American design was bought and played by Mr John Miller Gawler.

Mr Traill bought a block of land between Bayview and Arkaringa Crescents and gave
a portion of it as a site for the Church—the site on which St. Agnes now stands.

First Church of St.Agnes, dedicated 21 July 1899 by Bishop Goe.

1899

The church was begun in the year 1899, the architects being Messrs Carleton and
Carleton, and the builder Mr Hayball, of Brighton.

The date for the dedication was fixed for 21 July 1899, but the workmen were
hardly out of the building by that date, and everyone had to work hard to have the
church ready and the grounds cleared up for the evening. The inside was very plain
and simple on the day of dedication, lined with plaster, with a stained wood dado.
The chancel was raised two steps above the nave, and a small sanctuary one or two
steps higher. The Altar was covered with a red superfrontal and a white frontal. On
the carved Retable (work of Lily Drummond) was a carved cross and a pair of brass
vases (sent from Sydney by the Misses Vetches). The Sanctuary floor was covered
with a red carpet and a strip was laid down the centre of the Choir Stalls which
were plain wood. The small American organ had been brought from its temporary
home in the Congregational Church. At the west end was the Font given by the children
who had saved their pennies for the past 2–3 years. The flowers on the Altar
were Narcissi. The blackwood desk was fitted to a foundation and used as the pulpit.
The people of All Souls, Sandringham, gave a plain wooden lectern.

Some months later Mr George Hamilton Traill gave two stained glass windows
for the sanctuary in memory of Mrs Traill. His daughter Elsie carved panels for the
Sanctuary and Chancel screens.

There were many baptisms in the early days of St Agnes'. The first marriage was
celebrated on 12 December 1899 by the Rev Canon Tucker, the parties being Miss
Edith Jerrard and Mr Boothby. The first funeral to leave the church was that of
Mr J Evans.

Among the "identities" of these days was an old couple of the name Topin. No one
knew how long they had lived in Black Rock. Their home was a hut made of kerosene
tins, hidden away in the scrub. They earned their living by gathering mussels and
perriwinkles, and would be seen in the water up to their waists in all weathers. It
was considered a great triumph when Mrs Topin was prevailed upon to come to church.
The only thing she objected to was that some of the girls in the congregation laughed
at her hat, which was indeed a queer erection.

She was the scholar of the two, and used to read the papers to Topin. He was a
Londoner of the Costermonger type, and could neither read nor write.

1904

An anonymous gift of a carved lectern was made to the Church — it is this
same lectern which has graced the Church ever since. Fortunately it was one of the
pieces of furniture saved from the disastrous fire of 1913.

1907

A request was made for the Sunday School Hall to be used by the Black Rock State
School – this was refused on the grounds that the Hall was to be used
exclusively for Church of England purposes.

This year also saw the death of George Hamilton Traill who passed away in Rome.
A Memorial Window was placed in the west window on the north side of the Church, at
a cost of £34. The window was designed by Mr Montgomery and the subject matter
is a figure of Saint Simeon.

1913 — The Fire

Shrove Tuesday, 4 February 1913, was one of those awful days of raging north
wind blowing from morning to evening. In some way the scrub at the back of a house
in Bay View Crescent caught fire. The house was a fair-sized weatherboard structure,
with a thick hedge at the back and a row of tall pine trees at the side. The house
was unoccupied at the time. It did not take long for the wind to fan the flames
into a raging, devastating fire. The hedge was soon alight, and it was but a question
of a few minutes before the house was ablaze. Then the pine trees caught fire. The
house was burnt to the ground and the gaunt stems of the trees left standing.

Bay View Crescent, as it was then, was not wide enough to stop the fire. The
flames, blown by the fierce wind, leapt across, and the scrub on the other side,
behind the church, caught fire. Before anything could be done, the hedge and then
the parish hall were ablaze.

The people who assembled in Arkaringa Crescent were powerless to do anything.
There was no water. They saw the church was doomed. But for the Rev C.W. Wood
and a Mr Rayment, a church organist, who were staying at Black Rock at the
time, nothing would have been saved. The church was locked, and the key some
distance away.

These two men called upon the people to help them. With an axe they broke open
the door, and rushed in. Someone tried to save the things in the vestry, but by
that time the north wall was on fire, and as a surplice was seized it caught
fire. The altar [now in the Lady Chapel], with the cross and the vases and the
violet frontal, were first taken out, the pulpit was wrenched up, and the lectern,
the font, and the picture above the font were taken out, together with some seats
and books. But all the rest had to go. The windows, the chancel screen, the new
organ, which had just been paid for, and all the things of the vestry were burnt;
nothing was left except a ball of silver which was all that remained of the Chalice.

2013. Built in 1913, the Hall behind St Agnes Church.

The proprietress of the Linga Longa Tea Rooms on the Beach Road offered her
large room for church services, so all things saved from the fire were stored
at her house, and on Sundays services and Sunday School were held in her dining
room.

Two days after the fire a meeting was held in the home of Mr Gawler, to plan
the re-building of the Church. Amongst other resolutions it was resolved –
"that a school room be erected without delay – 36 feet by 30 feet with a
stage 20 feet by 15 feet and an ante-room 15 x 10, all to be used for Church
purposes pending the re-building of the Church." The new Hall was in fact built
by Easter. Both Church and hall had been insured to their full value.

On 2 November 1913 the foundation stone of the new brick church was laid by
Miss Elsie Traill, as a tribute to the interest taken by Mr Traill and family
in the original Church.

Foundation Stone for St Agnes laid by Miss Elsie Traill

2013. St Agnes Church in Arkaringa Crescent.

The present altar with two of the three replica stained-glass windows in the background

Mr W H Montgomery, who designed the original stained-glass windows, had made
replicas of the three windows, and except for the chancel screen and pulpit
erected later to the memory of the Rev Wilford Downs James, the pipe organ,
and the other alterations...the Church was much as it is to-day.

WW 1 Honour Board by D P Gawler

1914 — The WW1 Honour Board

Nearly every boy in the Sunday School at that time answered his country's call
in the Great War, and his name may be seen on the honour board of the present
church. The board itself was the work of one of those boys, Duncan Philip Gawler,
a noted wood carver of his time, completed just before he left for the front,
and dedicated shortly after the news of his death came to hand.

1916

From Sr Kathleen's reminiscences:

On Easter Eve ... April 11 1916, the present Church was duly consecrated
by Archbishop Clarke. There was no debt on the Church, but, up to the last he was
against consecrating as he said it was not a complete building, having the temporary
wall at the west end. However he consented in the end and the Church was duly
consecrated. The Church was full to the doors and it was a service of great joy and
thanksgiving.

[The Narthex extension was added in 1975.]

The installation of a Pipe Organ was completed and saw service for many years
before being sold in the 1960s to St Mary's South Camberwell. This year also
saw the commencement of Boy Scout training as a part of Church activities.

Each year in the spring, flower services for the children were held — it those
days there were not many flower gardens in Black Rock as there was no water laid on
— the flowers brought by the children were mostly wild flowers — these
were taken the next day to the Children's Hospital in Melbourne.

1919–1922

Black Rock Primary School (founded in 1910) purchased additional land in
November 1918, but the brick building providing extra classrooms on the extended
site was not constructed until 1922. In the meantime St Agnes Hall was leased for
two years at £40 per annum. Despite an objection from Annie McCaughey that
she had been using the hall in 1917 to conduct a private school for 21 children,
and Public Health Department reports in 1918 and 1919 listing additional facilities
and conditions necessary for the building to be used as a day school, the St Agnes
accommodation was used for classes from Black Rock State School, No. 3631, until
the new brick building was completed in 1922.

1920

Electric light was installed in the Sunday School Hall and the Church at a cost
of £29.1.0.

22 December 1925, The Age.Speech Night at St Agnes Day School.

1922

Water was laid on at the Church and this dispensed with the need for the 600
gallon water tank – which was valued and sold for £2.

1923

A Church School was established and advertisements for pupils were placed in The
Sun and The Age.

1925

[An advertisement in The Age, 2 December 1924, called for contractors to connect
the sewer to St Agnes Church and Vicarage, so it would have occurred in 1925.]

...my father gave two stained glass windows in memory of my mother, of which
there are replicas in the present Church. Later he gave the carved lectern which is in the
Church now. Elsie Traill also by degrees carved panels for the Sanctuary and the Chancel
Screen. A blue dossal was also added to the Sanctuary and an oak altar carved by Phillip
Gawler [now in the Lady Chapel] at a later date.

1935

In March it was agreed to allow an additional hall to be erected for the Men's
Club — size to be 15 x 26 feet. The Club was formed in January with a membership
of 35. [In later years it was used by the Lapidary Club.]

2013. St Agnes Church with the small hall constructed in 1935 in the background.

c.1950. (North to the left) Arkaringa Crescent (West) and Bluff Road at the top. St
Agnes Church with tennis court next to it.

1967

A new Vicarage was built during 1967, using funds from the sale of land at the
corner of Bluff Road and Arkaringa Crescent. This land had been a gift from the
Misses Trail. The land sold for $42,000.

The aerial photograph on the right dating from c.1950 shows the Church with its
School Hall behind, and Small Hall; a tennis court next to the Church; the old Vicarage
next to that; and the land running to Bluff Road owned by the Traill sisters.

1975

Robert Prenzel and the Eagle

On 17 February 1992, Frank Adams wrote to the Rev Roger Prowd at St Agnes
Church, Black Rock.

2014. Lectern in St Agnes Church. Carved by Robert Prenzel, likely in 1904.

He said:

Dear Roger,
Thank you for your time on Saturday 8th February and for allowing me to photograph
the eagle carved by my mother's father, Robert Prenzel (1866–1941). To the
best of my knowledge he carved the eagle late in 1930, possibly about 1938 (but
don't quote me on that). He carved a similar eagle for St. Hilary's Church, Kew,
during 1939 (copy of article in Pix magazine February 3, 1940 enclosed). He seemed
to carve things in batches covering a span of five or six years.

In support of this suggestion, the National Gallery of Victoria has a
sketch from 1935 by Robert
Prenzel of a design for an eagle lectern, and an article in PIX magazine 3 February
1940 (p36) has a photograph of Prenzel working on the eagle lectern for St Hilary's
Church, Kew.

Source of carvings in St Agnes? – Kathleen Gawler note.

Although Frank Adams surely recognised the work of his grandfather, he
may be wrong about the date of its installation in St Agnes. There is no mention by
past historians of such a change of lectern in the 1930s. Indeed there is a reference
that the latest lectern was an anonymous gift made in 1904 and
saved from the 1913 fire. This is supported by a note from Miss Kathleen Gawler written
some time before 2000.

Robert Prenzel had arrived in Melbourne from Europe in 1888 to view the Centennial
International Exhibition and stayed. In
1903 he
moved to Potter Street, Black Rock, so he was in the neighbourhood at the time.

Sources:

1925 Reminiscences of St Agnes' From The Beginning, by Sister Kathleen [Traill]
C.H.N.